The government is also fielding all kinds of "advanced" security
technologies. For example, anti-terror police are using Segways,
net-throwing guns, and other exotic hardware.

The U.S. government tells Americans traveling to Beijing to assume
that laptops, cell phones and other devices will be hacked, and
information on them copied, during the games.

One expert warns that even digital cameras could be hacked by the
Chinese government if plugged into one of the many digital
photo-viewing kiosks in the city.

Most taxi drivers and other attendee-facing people in China have
reportedly been "recruited" as "intelligence agents" ordered to
report any suspicious behavior.

The government has deployed 100,000 police in Beijing alone during
the games, plus another 100,000 People's Liberation Army soldiers and
600,000 "security volunteers," whose job is to report "suspicious behavior."

These 800,000 people are the public face of Olympic security. Behind
the scenes, an unknowable number of people are monitoring all those
cameras and microphones; hacking computers and stealing secrets;
monitoring web sites and reading e-mail; listening to phone calls and
tracking the movements of suspicious people.

Of course, the terrorist threat to the Olympics is real. But most of
the security effort is aimed at snuffing out protest or criticism of
the government.

Censorship remains in place. Thousands of dissidents have been
rounded up and jailed. Beijing residents have been intimidated into a
state of terror.

Many journalists have been denied entry to China to cover the games,
and access by journalists to many Web sites has been blocked, despite
the unblocking of some after initial protest. E-mail of foreign
journalists covering the games is selectively blocked by Chinese authorities.

Those publicly critical of the Beijing government have been denied
entry into China for the games, including former gold medalist Olympians.

I predicted in this space in December that the Olympics would prove a
"disaster" for the Chinese government because dissident groups and
disgruntled citizens will likely do all they can to use the Olympics
to gain attention for their causes and grievances. The government, I
predicted, would crack down harshly, and this authoritarian,
anti-democratic activity would become the main event at the games.
When China was granted the 2008 games seven years ago, Chinese
officials said the games would bring China the "respect, trust and
favor of the international community." My prediction was that China's
handling of security will bring China the opposite.

But what if I'm wrong?

What if the Olympics turn out to be the public relations coup of the
century for China's authoritarian government?

What If China's Orwellian Olympics Succeeds?

Nothing on this scale has ever been attempted. What if China
demonstrates that overwhelming, all-encompassing and ubiquitous
digital surveillance, eavesdropping on a massive scale, censorship,
the banning and arresting of "undesirables," and other Orwellian
measures is the path to success for international events. For
governing in an age of free speech?

The pass/fail test on this won't be whether all these systems
successfully stop terrorist attacks and muzzle free speech. That's
Beijing's metric.

The question is: Will Beijing get away with it? Will people -- both
Chinese citizens and foreign visitors -- shrug their shoulders and
accept it all? Or will they reject it and criticize it?

Will journalists do as their told, or will they go out and report
conditions in China as they do in all other countries that host the
Olympics? Will athletes serve as unwitting apologists for the Chinese
Communist Party?

Will the global public remain apathetic about Beijing's Orwellian
experiment? Will everyone trot out the old
"China-isn't-perfect-but-it's-moving-in-the-right-direction" defense?
Is world depicted in Orwell's "1984" really the "right direction" for anyone?

It's the classic slippery slope. All governments, and most companies,
engage in some kind of security, which often involves snooping,
surveillance, activity monitoring and censorship. If Beijing proves
that people accept the massive application of electronic
Orwellianism, they'll be tempted to follow China's example.

The Chinese government has made itself the only organization in the
world that knows how to do this.

Will governments turn to China after future terrorist attacks or
threats to public order to learn how to build and maintain their own
Orwellian IT systems? Will China advise its allies in Darfur, North
Korea, Burma and elsewhere on how to maintain power and snuff out
dissent through Orwellian IT?

For the sake of the athletes, I hope the Beijing Olympics are a
successful sporting event.

And for the safety of Chinese and foreign visitors, I hope all
terrorist attacks are foiled, and that there are no accidents,
injuries or violence.

But for the sake of humanity, I hope Beijing's Orwellian IT experiment fails.